Pleopeltis polypodioides / Resurrection Fern at the North Carolina Botanical Gardens at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill, NC
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Singapore
seen from Russia
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Poland

seen from Switzerland

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Switzerland
seen from China
Pleopeltis polypodioides / Resurrection Fern at the North Carolina Botanical Gardens at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill, NC
#2853 - Lepisorus thunbergianus - Weeping Fern
@purrdence headed off to Japan pretty much immeadiately after getting back from New Zealand, and happily had the time to photograph some of the species she saw.
Such as this fern, growing on treetrunks in the Peace Park in Hiroshima, a small distance from Ground Zero. I should not have to point out that the trees are less than 80 years old.
AKA Pleopeltis thunbergianus, elongata, linearis, and nuda, Lepisorus calcifer, linearis, pygmaeus, and simulans, and Polypodium atropunctatum, lineare, nudum and thunbergianum. Hawaiian names include 'akolea, 'ekaha, pakahakaha, and pua'akuhinia.
Lepisorus thunbergianus is a frequently epiphytic fern growing in the temperate zone from northern Pakistan to Hawaii.
Hiroshima, Japan.
Staghorn Fern
Platycerium Bifurcatum
Spores of Pyrrosia hastata are so beautiful. #ferns #fernsofinstagram #pyrrosia #pyrrosiahastata #iloveferns #lamacchinafissa #gardenstudiovivaio #elisabettacavrini #gardensofinstagram #gardenwriters #gardenerfriends #italiangardeners #felci #polypodiaceae #feltfern #asianferns #iloveferns #instaferns #instafern #provinciadimantova #gardengifts (presso La Macchina Fissa) https://www.instagram.com/p/CR1gD21IoUT/?utm_medium=tumblr
My Pyrrosia is making spores! I'm still not positive about its identity, but with the longest frond approaching 64cm, it seems like P. longifolia is a safe bet. It's been an easy grower for me, staying outdoors in shade most of the time and only coming in for freezes.
2017/10/24 . 着生し直してから、やっとここ迄。 来年に期待してます! . #coronarium #platycerium #plantstagram #instaplant #staghornferns #polypodiaceae #fern #green #plants #コロナリウム #ビカクシダ #wl_record
Sori on the underside of the Licorice Fern, Polypodium glycyrrhiza.
#1903 - Microsorum pustulatum ssp. pustulatum - Kangaroo Fern
If you had to describe New Zealand’s climate in one word, that word might be ‘moist’, given the Islands are mountainous roadblocks in the way of every weather front coming across the Pacific, or howling up out of the Antarctic. There’s a reason the Māori-language name of the country is Aotearoa - "land of the long white cloud". @purrdence’s been over there for a month and has only seen the top of a mountain, unobscured by cloud, once, and that was from a plane flying overhead. Admittedly that might also have something to do with the cyclone that’s closed half the railways and major roads.
But even if I’m exaggerating about the climate, New Zealand enjoys a wide variety of large and handsome ferns, so I’m going to be discussing a few.
These ferns, which can grow up to 50cm long, were growing near Huka Falls, where 220,000 liters of water a second roars through a canyon 15m across. AKA hound's tongue, and in Māori: kōwaowao, or pāraharaha, Kangaroo Fern is also known from the moister parts of Eastern Australia, where is presumably where it got that common name. M. pustulatum subsp. howense is endemic to Lord Howe Island. Zealandia has also been suggested as the generic name.
They’re adept epiphytes, common on tree ferns but also branches and trunks of trees, on rocks, logs and occasionally along the ground in wet forests and rainforests. If conditions are suitable, a good garden or terrarium fern.